Phil Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president for worldwide marketing, shows CBS News’ John Blackstone some of the many features of the iPhone:

MacDailyNews Note: It is quite interesting to see how Schiller – just like Jobs in other interviews – goes out of his way to avoid using the term “computer” when talking about iPhone, even though the iPhone is obviously a computer with the (patented) UI of the future (iPods will use it and so will Macs, to some extent, eventually). Perhaps Apple’s marketing research says to avoid the term “computer” or they have something up their sleeve to be revealed later? What do you think?

Has anyone noticed that the iPhone Steve demoed Tuesday was rigged via its dock to a conference hall projection system?

Think about having in 3 or 4 years from now a 24″ screen with keyboard and mouse, Wacom tablet (and any other peripheral you use with your iMac or iBook) connected to a small dock. Same setup at your parents house. You use it at home where your docked iPhone is running the show, with its 500GB flash disk and Core8Quattro processor. You go to parent’s house, playing a game or movie on the iPhone while your spouse drives (or the car drives itself). You use parent’s dock to use your ‘computer’ there. Same for your wife carrying her iPhone between home and work. No more home, office desktops, laptop for travel. You have one computer for everywhere, and it goes with you in your pocket. And it has Apple logo on its back.

Open your mind to that possibility folks! I think that’s where we are heading!